Why in the News?
Recent protests by factory workers in Noida, Ghaziabad and Manesar have brought attention to a sharp divergence between rising inflation and stagnant wages. CPI-IW (base year 2016) shows industrial worker inflation rising by 24.8% nationally (Feb 2021-Feb 2026), while key industrial clusters recorded even higher inflation: 27.9% in Gurugram, 27.2% in Faridabad, and ~27.4% in Ghaziabad, Noida, and Delhi. In contrast, minimum wages increased at a much slower pace, Haryana (~15%), Delhi (~20.6%), Uttar Pradesh (~24.6%). This widening gap has reduced real wages, triggering protests.
Why are workers protesting despite periodic wage revisions?
- Real Wage Erosion: Indicates decline in purchasing power; inflation (24.8%) exceeded wage growth across states.
- Regional Inflation Spike: Shows concentrated distress; Gurugram (27.9%), Faridabad (27.2%), Noida/Delhi (~27.4%).
- Inadequate Wage Growth: Reflects disparity. In Haryana, wages saw a lower increase (~15%) compared to the ~27.9% inflation rate before the April 2026 revision. Similarly, in Uttar Pradesh, the 10-year wage increase (42%) is significantly lower than the cost of living increase, resulting in lower real wages compared to a decade ago.
- Cost of Living Pressures: Includes rent, LPG, food; example, workers report LPG cylinder costs exceeding ₹4,000 in informal markets.
- Expectation Gap: Indicates mismatch between announced revisions and actual income improvements.
How has inflation outpaced wages structurally?
Inflation has structurally outpaced wage growth in India by creating a persistent gap where rising living costs (food, rent, fuel) consistently exceed nominal salary adjustments, leading to a decline in real purchasing power. This phenomenon is driven by a failure in the wage-indexation mechanism, regional disparities in inflation, and a shift towards variable pay that does not match the rapid rise of essentials.
- CPI-IW Linkage Failure: Shows weak adjustment of wages with CPI-IW (base 2016).
- Weak Adjustment: Wage revisions, particularly in manufacturing, often lag behind CPI-IW movements, meaning workers feel the price rise long before they receive any compensation.
- Time Lag: The 6-monthly Variable Dearness Allowance (VDA) adjustment is often too slow during high-inflation periods, leaving workers vulnerable
- National vs Regional Gap: Demonstrates divergence; national inflation (24.8%) lower than industrial clusters (~27%).
- Nominal vs Real Wages: Indicates nominal increase but real decline.
- While nominal salaries have increased (often 8-10% annually), the “real wage” (purchasing power) has remained flat or declined because essential costs have risen faster.
- Multi-component Inflation: Includes housing, fuel, food simultaneously rising.
- Housing & Fuel: Fuel costs rise and feed into logistics and travel, increasing costs of goods. Rent in urban industrial areas also frequently spikes, placing pressure on lower income brackets.
- Food and Beverages: This category, taking a high weight in worker consumption, often witnesses high volatility and consistent upward pressure, hitting low-income households hardest
- Labour Bureau Data: Labour Bureau data highlights that corporate profits in many sectors (e.g., manufacturing/engineering) have grown much faster than wage shares.
- Wage-Share Decline: Between 2015 and 2023, corporate profits as a share of GDP rose from 3.8% to 5.2%, while the wage share declined.
- Productivity Gap: Indian workers are becoming more productive (higher output per worker), but these gains are translating into corporate profits rather than increased wage rates, resulting in a structural gap
What are the new Labour Codes and what do they assure?
- Code on Wages, 2019: Ensures universal minimum wage and timely payment across sectors.
- Industrial Relations Code, 2020: Regulates hiring, firing, and dispute resolution mechanisms.
- Code on Social Security, 2020: Extends social protection to unorganised and gig workers.
- Occupational Safety, Health and Working Conditions Code, 2020: Ensures safety standards, working hours, and welfare provisions.
- Assurance Framework: Establishes 8-hour workday norm, 48-hour weekly cap, overtime compensation, and safe working conditions.
What is happening in implementation on the ground?
- Delayed Notification: While effective from Nov 2025, not all state rules are fully notified or uniformly enforced, leading to partial implementation.
- Employer Discretion: The flexibility provided has seen reports of increased working hours (up to 12 hours/day) and worker complaints about non-payment or underpayment of overtime, particularly in manufacturing hubs.
- Worker Complaints: Highlights non-payment or underpayment of overtime in factories in Noida and Manesar.
- Administrative Gaps: Demonstrates lack of inspection and enforcement capacity.
- There is a notable lack of enforcement capacity, with a shift from “Inspector Raj” to an “Inspector-cum-Facilitator” system.
- Transition Uncertainty: Reflects confusion during shift from old laws to new codes.
Why is there confusion around working hours and overtime?
- Definition Gaps: Shows ambiguity between “working hours” and “spread-over”; example-12-hour presence including breaks treated as normal shift in some factories.
- State-Level Rules: Indicates variation; example: different states interpreting overtime eligibility differently under draft rules.
- Spread-over Norms: Includes rest intervals within 12-hour cap; example: worker present for 12 hours but paid for 8 hours citing breaks.
- Overtime Ambiguity: Highlights unclear thresholds; example: workers exceeding 8 hours not always compensated at double rate.
- Inspection Challenges: Demonstrates weak monitoring; example: industrial clusters with limited labour inspections.
What are the structural issues in wage determination?
- Irregular Revision Cycle: Shows failure of annual revision mechanism.
- State Disparity: Indicates uneven wage standards across Haryana, UP, Delhi.
- Categorisation Complexity: Includes multiple wage categories (skilled/unskilled).
- Pandemic Disruption: Highlights delayed revisions during Covid-19 period.
- Weak Enforcement: Demonstrates gaps in compliance monitoring.
What are the broader economic implications?
- Demand Compression: Reduces consumption due to declining real incomes.
- Labour Unrest: Increases frequency of industrial protests.
- Productivity Impact: Affects industrial output in key clusters.
- Informalisation: Encourages off-the-books employment practices.
- Inequality Expansion: Widens gap between labour and capital incomes.
Way Forward
- CPI-Linked Wage Indexation: Ensures automatic revision of minimum wages with CPI-IW; prevents real wage erosion amid 24-28% inflation trends.
- Clear Labour Code Rules: Defines working hours, overtime, and spread-over explicitly; removes ambiguity in 12-hour shift interpretation.
- Uniform National Floor Wage: Establishes enforceable baseline wage across states; reduces disparities such as Haryana vs Uttar Pradesh.
- Overtime Enforcement Mechanism: Ensures double wages beyond 8 hours; strengthens compliance in industrial clusters like Noida-Manesar.
- Strengthened Labour Inspection System: Deploys digital inspections and audits; improves enforcement and reduces informal labour practices.
Conclusion
The divergence between inflation and wage growth reflects structural inefficiencies in India’s labour economy. Strengthening CPI-linked wage revision, ensuring clarity in Labour Code rules, and improving enforcement mechanisms remain essential.
PYQ Relevance
[UPSC 2024] Discuss the merits and demerits of the four ‘Labour Codes’ in the context of labour market reforms in India. What has been the progress so far in this regard?
Linkage: The PYQ directly aligns with the article’s focus on Labour Codes, especially issues of implementation, wage protection, and working-hour ambiguities. It extends the debate from policy intent (merits) to ground realities (demerits), including wage stagnation, enforcement gaps, and labour unrest.

